Stacking Solitary Bee Hive

Details

Bees make great guests. Host them in this adorable, stackable bee habitat and they’ll pollinate flowers, fruits, and vegetables, making your garden lush. Made from sustainably sourced wood and designed to suit their needs, this hotel is good for the bees, the environment, and your backyard.

Material: Timber wood

Care: Naturally durable wood; no chemical treatments needed

Includes gift box and instructions for use

FSC certified wood is sourced from sustainable and managed forests

Habitat can be opened for inspection and/or cleaning

Hole sizes are designed to attract non-swarming bees

Safe around children and pets

Great for education

Note: Protect full bee tubes with mesh to prevent predation by woodpeckers

Designed & tested in the UK; Made in China

Dimensions: 7.87" x 8.66" x 8.66"

Weight: 1.2 lbs.

14 Reviews (4.9 out of 5 Grommets)

Sorted by Rating

5

awesome looking

3/4/2019byDon

it is still to cold to put it outside. about two more weeks and we should be good to go. it is awesome looking a well built

5

Cute!!

2/13/2019byBobbi

I just hope wasps don’t find it first and take over.

5

Nicely made

1/7/2019bybarbara

I bought this for a friend who wants to naturalize her yard as much as possible. The bee house is quite diminutive so you can find different places to put it that will be unobtrusive.

Mason bees are particularly attractive because not only do they pollinate, but they don't sting. The only thing I didn't know beforehand is that the bees are only available in our area in the spring. So I told her the bees will be her March birthday present.

The house looks like it will withstand the weather in the Northwest, and she says she's found the perfect location for early sun on the hive and she'll be able to watch the bees come and go.More >
< Less

5

Wonderful Addition to Garden

12/31/2018bySherry

My son and his husband are thrilled with this hive. It's good-looking and will be great in their natural garden. Now my other son-in-law wants one!More >
< Less

5

A great gift for your garden.... or someone else’s garden!

12/31/2018byCheryl

This year this house for solitary bees was on my list of meaningful gifts. It is no secret that our bugs and pollinators are on the decline and under attack. One of the ways to not only improve your own habitat for pollinators such as mason and orchard bees, but to educate the next generation of guardians is setting up these solitary bee hives. Not only can you feel good about providing housing, you can also open it to show kids and adults the impact of the housing. It can be cleaned out and reused too!! I am excited to put some of these out on our farm this spring.More >
< Less

About Wildlife World

Air Bee ‘n Bee

Put a hotel—or two—in your yard. Attract beneficial insects and animals into your local ecology with these beautifully designed habitat houses.

The folks at Wildlife World put a lot of thought and care into their designs, testing out everything from their bat boxes to butterfly habitats on a 35-acre farm in the UK. Each one is sustainably built, with timber that’s FSC certified and sourced from well-managed forests and other elements (like plastic or metal) that’s recycled.

Each little habitat doesn’t just look adorable, it also suits the needs of its guests while helping out your surroundings. Bees and butterflies pollinate, which helps keep your garden lush; while bats and frogs ward off pests.

Besides all those benefits, these critter homes are filled with learning opportunities, too. Scientific concepts like “pollination” and “the food chain” are way less abstract when you can see them come to life and point them out in nature . . . better yet, in your own yard.